waltz Matilda
English
Pronunciation
- IPA(key): /ˈwɔːl(t)s məˈtɪldə/
Audio (AU) (file)
Verb
waltz Matilda (third-person singular simple present waltzes Matilda, present participle waltzing Matilda, simple past and past participle waltzed Matilda)
- (Australia) To travel on foot carrying a swag (belongings wrapped in a cloth); to so travel looking for work.
- 2002, Stuart Dick, Outback to Asia, page 163,
- As far as I was concerned the choice was Alice Springs, the center of the great Outback or a box car. There was no contest. I was ready to waltz Matilda.
- 2005, Kristin Otto, Yarra: A Diverting History of Melbourne′s Murky River, unnumbered page,
- A 1928 bestseller offered the opinion that ‘there is only one way of getting off the beaten track—take a swag. Victoria is full of possibilities for the walker willing to “waltz Matilda”,’ and went on to describe the track.
- 2012, Bruce Kapferer, Legends of People, Myths of State, page 173,
- Indeed, while in Australia before the war Simpson had “waltzed matilda,” tramped through the bush, independent and outside the constructed differentiating society, carrying all his worldy goods—his “bluey”——on his back.
- 2002, Stuart Dick, Outback to Asia, page 163,
Usage notes
Now chiefly used in the context of or in allusion to the song Waltzing Matilda.
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